Since its inception in Manchester in 1821 as a response to the 1819 Peterloo Massacre, the Guardian has been a key institution in the definition and development of liberalism. The stereotype of the ‘Guardianista‘, an environmentally-conscious, Labour-voting, progressively-minded public sector worker endures in the popular mythology of British press history.
Yet the title has a complex lineage and occupies an equivocal position between capital and its opponents. It has both fiercely defended the need for fearless, independent journalism and handed over documents and hard drives to the authorities; it has carved out a niche for itself in the UK media as a progressive voice but has also consistently diminished more radical projects on the left.
Published to coincide with its 200th anniversary, Capitalism’s Conscience brings together historians, journalists and activists in an appraisal of the Guardian’s contribution to British politics, society and culture – and its distinctive brand of centrism. Contextualising some of the main controversies in which the title has been implicated, the book offers timely insights into the publication’s history, loyalties and political values.
Chaired by the book’s editor Des Freedman, Professor of Media and Communications at Goldsmiths and a founding member of the Media Reform Coalition. He is the author of books including The Politics of Media Policy (2008) and The Contradictions of Media Power (2014) and co-author of Misunderstanding the Internet (2016) and The Media Manifesto (2020).
Victoria Brittain is a former associate foreign editor of the Guardian. Her books include Hidden Lives, Hidden Deaths and Death of Dignity. After leaving the Guardian in the 1990s her work focussed mainly on the fallout of the so-called war on terror and on Palestine.
Ghada Karmi is a leading Palestinian activist, academic and writer. She is a research fellow at the Institute of Arab and Islamic studies at the university of Exeter and is also vice-chair of the Council for Arab-British Understanding (CAABU) Her major area of work has been on the Palestine/Israel conflict and she has published widely on this subject.
Matt Kennard is a Bertha fellow at the Centre for Investigative Journalism. He was previously a reporter for the Financial Times and is the author of two books, Irregular Army and The Racket, which was released in 2015
To purchase copies of our speakers’ work from our local independent bookstore News From Nowhere, follow the links below:
Dr Des Freedman – The Contradictions of Media Power
Matt Kennard – The Racket
Ghada Karmi – Return: A Palestinian Memoir
Victoria Brittain – Shadow Lives
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Proudly supported by The Institute of Creative Enterprise at Edge Hill University’s MA in International Creative Enterprise.
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Date: Wednesday 5th May
Time: 6pm
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Start: 6:00pm